...Central Bicol State University of Agriculture-Sipocot Sipocot, Camarines Sur Interview on Local Undocumented Japanese Period In Iriga Submitted by: Alcedo, John Paul Laurence A. Submitted to: Ma. Expedita Artiaga BIOGRAPIES THE PRIMARY SOURCE Her name is Mercedez Blanco born in San Juan Iriga, Albay. She died at age of 69 in Cristo Rey Lupi, Camarines Sur. Because of the poverty, she only finished Grade 2 at San Juan Elementary School. Her religion is Roman Catholic. Her spouse is Juan Albalate (+) and they gifted 4 children but when her spouse died she married again and gifted 2 child. Because of poverty and afraid to the Japanese, she and together of her family went to Cristo Rey Lupi, Camarines Sur. Her occupation when she’s living is farmer and sometimes she sells kakanin for extra income. According also to my grandfather, she loves telling stories and she is very religious woman. THE SECONDARY SOURCE His name is Orlando Albalate y Blanco born on January 11, 1944 in San Juan Iriga, Albay. He is 72 years old now. He only finished Grade 4 at San Juan Elementary School. His religion is Roman Catholic. He is the oldest child of Mercedez Blanco (+) (the primary source) and Juan Albalate (+). He married at the age of 19 to Emelda Sanez (+) and gifted 10 child. He served as barangay captain of Cristo Rey Lupi, Camarines Sur in 18 years. Now he is paralyzing since 2009. SOCIAL LIFE According to my grandfather (interviewee), the relationship of...
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...(Darby 84-88). Cold War tensions, the Korean War, and anti-communist operations, were all handled by the new president, he also created the Interstate Highway System and strengthened social security (“Dwight D. Eisehower”1). The presidency was not easy but Ike learned valuable lessons from it. A Treaty signed on July 26, 1953, ended the Korean War (Darby 89-90). Sadly, Eisenhower halted in the civil rights of African Americans in the south; he hesitated to use his authority to enforce the new protection laws. Despite a Democratic majority Eisenhower accomplished many victories (“Dwight D. Eisenhower”4). Eisenhower was against atomic weaponry (“Dwight D. Eisenhower”3), and also believed in the “domino theory” of communism (“Dwight Eisenhower Biograpy”3). In September of 1955, the president suffered a stroke (Darby 92-93). After recovery, he ran for a second term and won once again (Darby 95). Dwight was said to be a religious man, he was key in the United States using the motto “In God we Trust” (Dwight Eisenhower Biography”4). In 1957 and 1960 Eisenhower signed legislation for civil rights (“Dwight D. Eisenhower”5). Taking a turn for the worse Dwight suffered a stroke (Darby 99). In his two terms Eisenhower accomplished many things, creating the U.S. Information Agency, creating the Interstate Highway System, and annexing Alaska and Hawaii, finally he signed the bill that formed The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). Leaving office in January of 1961, Eisenhower’s...
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... BERNATH LECTURE The New International History of the Cold War: Three (Possible) Paradigms* The Cold War is not what it once was. Not only has the conflict itself been written about in the past tense for more than a decade, but historians’ certainties about the character of the conflict have also begun to blur. The concerns brought on by trends of the past decade – such trifles as globalization, weapons proliferation, and ethnic warfare – have made even old strategy buffs question the degree to which the Cold War ought to be put at the center of the history of the late twentieth century. In this article I will try to show how some people within our field are attempting to meet such queries by reconceptualizing the Cold War as part of contemporary international history. My emphasis will be on issues connecting the Cold War – defined as a political conflict between two power blocs – and some areas of investigation that in my opinion hold much promise for reformulating our views of that conflict, blithely summed up as ideology, technology, and the Third World. I have called this lecture “Three (Possible) Paradigms” not just to avoid making too presumptuous an impression on the audience but also to indicate that my use of the term “paradigm” is slightly different from the one most people have taken over from Thomas Kuhn’s work on scientific revolutions. In the history of science, a paradigm has come to mean a comprehensive explanation, a kind of scientific “level”...
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